These houses write their own elegies. Sometimes, they write your personal elegy. Most of my visual life in Texas consisted of these quiet structures.
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This week, The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts announced the recipients of its fall 2018 grants.
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News
Another Building Project Creeps into a Turrell Skyspace
by Paula Newtonby Paula Newton 2 commentsDoes the Turrell versus development story sound familiar?
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News
Curator Shuffle: Changes at Art League Houston & the Art Museum of Southeast Texas
by Brandon Zechby Brandon Zech 3 commentsTwo Texas institutions are getting curators who have a great appreciation for Texas art and artists.
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If one turns a corner in the upper gallery, a sunny narrative breaks open and dispels any and all disquietude.
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Christina Rees and Brandon Zech on the evolution of a young painter, the women of Flatbed Press, and this weekend's big Glasstire Party celebrating San Antonio artists.
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News
Sign up Now! Artist Can Apply for West Austin Studio Tour
by Paula Newtonby Paula Newton 0 commentThe call for entries is now open and the deadline to participate as an artist is February 15.
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One of the drawbacks of Flatbed's move, even though the press will be sharing the space with another tenant, is that it will have fewer galleries and artists as neighbors.
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News
Austin’s CAMIBAart Set to Relocate with Big, New Plans
by Paula Newtonby Paula Newton 1 comment“Through this self-evaluation,” states the CAMIBAart press release, “we determined the standard white-box gallery model is not the most efficient and effective way to represent our artists and their works.”
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Miller’s solo exhibition is spread across the modest two rooms and hallway in San Antonio's Sala Diaz, and is a quietly epic meditation on the sublime absurdity of existence.
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News
Moody Center & French Embassy Team Up to Present Special Program
by Brandon Zechby Brandon Zech 0 commentThe program, which is organized around the theme of ecology, will feature the openings of the Moody Center's spring art exhibitions, film screenings, and a keynote lecture by Rice University professor Timothy Morton and artist and performer Laurie Anderson.
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News
Applications Now Open for Eleven-Month Galveston Artist Residency
by Brandon Zechby Brandon Zech 0 commentAll GAR residents receive a studio, an apartment, a $500 travel stipend, and a monthly stipend of $1000.
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Profile
Business and Pleasure: 50 Years of Photography by Paul Hester
by Gene Fowlerby Gene Fowler 8 commentsA half-century of anyone’s artistic activity is a lot of ground to cover, and Hester describes the upcoming show as a collage of his work, with all the variation one might expect in art produced for commerce and culture over such a span of time.
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Review
The Life We Live Here: Bob Schneider at Redbud Gallery
by Hannah Deanby Hannah Dean 0 commentWhether bursting with visual stimuli or more sparse and lonesome, these works speak to lonesomeness, self-discovery, attitudes about sex, and the kitchen-sink drama of everyday life.
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News
Just Go! Why Not? CASETA Presents a Talk on Early Texas Art
by Paula Newtonby Paula Newton 0 commentCan’t wait for the Seventeenth Annual CASETA Symposium and Texas Art Fair, which takes place in Austin this spring? Well-known for its interesting panel discussions and lectures, those events are…
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You would know this if you knew your pop culture.
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"How was I to know / She was with the Russians too?"
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Tomlinson’s silkscreen prints of people detained at the southern US-Mexican border is the subject of the first exhibition of his work since the veteran Fort Worth artist’s death last September.
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News
The MAC Opens Its New Space in Dallas With Two Texas-Based Exhibitions
by Glasstireby Glasstire 0 commentThis weekend The MAC in Dallas opens its long-awaited new space in the Cedars neighborhood, after two years of programming in an interim space just down the street from the new location.
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News
Bryan Museum Kicks Off Lecture Series About Texas History
by Brandon Zechby Brandon Zech 0 commentCovering subjects ranging from the Alamo, to the Battle of San Jacinto, to the role of women on the Texas frontier, the museum's Historically Speaking Lecture Series will expand on moments and concepts that are already well-represented in its collection.